F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Device performance remains stable without achieving maximum refresh rate.

Device performance remains stable without achieving maximum refresh rate.

Device performance remains stable without achieving maximum refresh rate.

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GaleFrostbane
Member
132
05-17-2016, 10:41 AM
#1
My monitor runs at 280 Hz, but on Windows it always shows 240 Hz. Since I’ve enabled stretched resolution, I can’t adjust the display settings. I’m planning to upgrade to a 360 Hz monitor and need this resolved quickly.
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GaleFrostbane
05-17-2016, 10:41 AM #1

My monitor runs at 280 Hz, but on Windows it always shows 240 Hz. Since I’ve enabled stretched resolution, I can’t adjust the display settings. I’m planning to upgrade to a 360 Hz monitor and need this resolved quickly.

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M0rdeKaiser
Member
243
05-17-2016, 11:30 AM
#2
I think that's the limit of your GPU's capability.
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M0rdeKaiser
05-17-2016, 11:30 AM #2

I think that's the limit of your GPU's capability.

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ReDeR_Games
Member
194
05-17-2016, 11:57 AM
#3
What GPU are you referring to? Also, stretched resolution means increasing the display size beyond what the screen actually supports. Bring it back to a standard resolution and it should work fine. Losing 40Hz at such high refresh rates doesn’t really matter because it’s not noticeable.
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ReDeR_Games
05-17-2016, 11:57 AM #3

What GPU are you referring to? Also, stretched resolution means increasing the display size beyond what the screen actually supports. Bring it back to a standard resolution and it should work fine. Losing 40Hz at such high refresh rates doesn’t really matter because it’s not noticeable.

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QmGaming
Junior Member
3
05-18-2016, 08:20 AM
#4
You must turn on 280Hz in the monitor's OSD settings. It needs a DisplayPort connection. The resolution might be incorrect—review the NV control panel and try DDU to see if 1920x1080 appears.
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QmGaming
05-18-2016, 08:20 AM #4

You must turn on 280Hz in the monitor's OSD settings. It needs a DisplayPort connection. The resolution might be incorrect—review the NV control panel and try DDU to see if 1920x1080 appears.

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WhiteLimon
Junior Member
38
05-26-2016, 10:48 PM
#5
The display appears to have a native resolution of 1920x1080 and operates at 280 Hz, but it seems limited to DP mode rather than HDMI. It might need manual activation in the monitor settings for the OC mode. The maximum standard is 240 Hz, though 4070 can handle up to 4K at that rate. At 1080p there should be more bandwidth available, even if the exact limit isn't clear. Running any of these displays would require checking the specific model and its capabilities.
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WhiteLimon
05-26-2016, 10:48 PM #5

The display appears to have a native resolution of 1920x1080 and operates at 280 Hz, but it seems limited to DP mode rather than HDMI. It might need manual activation in the monitor settings for the OC mode. The maximum standard is 240 Hz, though 4070 can handle up to 4K at that rate. At 1080p there should be more bandwidth available, even if the exact limit isn't clear. Running any of these displays would require checking the specific model and its capabilities.

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beardedlizzy
Junior Member
11
05-27-2016, 04:24 AM
#6
My understanding is similar for AMD.
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beardedlizzy
05-27-2016, 04:24 AM #6

My understanding is similar for AMD.

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emmylee33
Senior Member
710
05-27-2016, 08:12 AM
#7
I applied the OC mode on my screen and eliminated the stretched resolution, but the issue persists. The available choices are 240:50 and 60.
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emmylee33
05-27-2016, 08:12 AM #7

I applied the OC mode on my screen and eliminated the stretched resolution, but the issue persists. The available choices are 240:50 and 60.

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Benomite
Member
132
05-29-2016, 07:49 AM
#8
In the Nvidia Control Panel, navigate to "Change resolution" on the left side. You'll find additional settings there. Explore various modes, as they may offer different refresh rate lists depending on your monitor. If the option isn't visible, select Customize and adjust manually. Ensure Full RGB remains active after changing modes (check the options below the screenshots), since some modes restrict RGB levels by default.
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Benomite
05-29-2016, 07:49 AM #8

In the Nvidia Control Panel, navigate to "Change resolution" on the left side. You'll find additional settings there. Explore various modes, as they may offer different refresh rate lists depending on your monitor. If the option isn't visible, select Customize and adjust manually. Ensure Full RGB remains active after changing modes (check the options below the screenshots), since some modes restrict RGB levels by default.

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callme_crybaby
Junior Member
41
05-30-2016, 03:01 PM
#9
The image confirms the display remains at 1720x1080, indicating the resolution hasn’t been restored to native settings. Attempting to adjust it via Windows or the Nvidia Control Panel may not work; consider updating or reinstalling the drivers from the beginning.
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callme_crybaby
05-30-2016, 03:01 PM #9

The image confirms the display remains at 1720x1080, indicating the resolution hasn’t been restored to native settings. Attempting to adjust it via Windows or the Nvidia Control Panel may not work; consider updating or reinstalling the drivers from the beginning.

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EndKnight02
Junior Member
40
05-30-2016, 03:34 PM
#10
Are you satisfied with the cable quality? Does your equipment actually handle it? Could a slower or outdated GPU/integrated graphics port affect performance? Is the 280Hz rate coming from DP or HDMI? At what resolution is the 180Hz figure shown? Might the stretched settings be causing confusion and only working at full native? Try running the game in native mode and then adjust its resolution to match your stretched display. Since Asus claims it's overclockable, stability isn't guaranteed.
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EndKnight02
05-30-2016, 03:34 PM #10

Are you satisfied with the cable quality? Does your equipment actually handle it? Could a slower or outdated GPU/integrated graphics port affect performance? Is the 280Hz rate coming from DP or HDMI? At what resolution is the 180Hz figure shown? Might the stretched settings be causing confusion and only working at full native? Try running the game in native mode and then adjust its resolution to match your stretched display. Since Asus claims it's overclockable, stability isn't guaranteed.